BROOKLYN, NY, April 25, 2013 – Brooklyn-based blog Fleshbot is getting in the erotic fiction game with Fleshbot Fiction, a new erotica imprint. The sexually charged short stories are available at affordable price points – $ .99 to $2.99 – for download to all computers, smartphones, tablets and e-readers.

Fleshbot Fiction, which has seen a significant spike in traffic thanks to recent media attention from arts/culture outlets such as Salon and Slate, offers fans of Fleshbot’s fabulously filthy content another erotic option, reaching every fantasy, kink and orientation through literary foreplay while drawing in new customers looking to easily access quality short fiction without paying high prices of anthologies or weeding through poorly written prose on free sites.
“We want to make Fleshbot Fiction a destination much like iTunes, where you can simply click on the story you want to read for no more than a dollar or so, and you’re transported in no time,” explains Fleshbot owner/editor Lux Alptraum. “Selling the e-books using an inexpensive price model just makes sense.”
Fleshbot Fiction has so far added the steamy works of talented authors such as Daisy Danger, William O., Howard Raymond, Louise Lagris, Olivia Glass and Louise Friday, and will post more diverse, fetish-specific stories on a regular basis as the site grows with its audience. The low, fixed price points will encourage customers to discover more new authors and their searing stories.
“We have plans to offer these single stories across a wide array of kinks and sexual orientations, adds Alptraum. “Fleshbot Fiction will provide the literary equivalent of the hardcore content Fleshbot is known for, catering to every sexual flavor you can dream up,”
For more information, contact : www.fleshbotfiction.com
Salon Article:
Media Contact: Brian Gross, BSG PR, 818-340-4422. Brian@bsgpr.com. Twitter: @bsgpr
ABOUT FLESHBOT:
Fleshbot.com is a hardcore erotica blog featuring news, reviews and photo galleries for both hetero- and homosexual audiences. The site was launched in 2003 by Gawker Media and bought by editor Lux Alptraum in 2012, and continues as a popular independent website, with a solid foothold in both mainstream and adult mediums.

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